<span>A. Hyperbole
There is happiness, and then there is the happiness described in this passage. Hyperbole is an extreme exaggeration, and the author here is extremely exaggerating the happiness that the man is feeling. He is overemphasizing aspects of happiness and stretching them to the farthest explanation in order to create humor in the passage.</span>
Im kinda thinking either A, or B
Explanation:
presentation is to present something about given topic or it is the explanation of topic in front of people
Answer:
Suspiros, Merengues, the stale candy of everyone’s childhood.
Explanation:
An allusion is the referencing of something without actually explicitly mentioning it. It acts as a means to bring something into the mind without directly mentioning it in detail. It could be used as a means to refer to something that the writer/author wants to bring into mind but not direct referencing.
Judith Cofer Ortiz's "The Latin Deli: An Ars Poetica" is an observation that uses vivid imagery and detailed description. It focuses on the issue of an immigrant displacement and the identity crisis, being uprooted from the 'old lie' into the new world of America. An example of an allusion is found in the mention of <em>"Suspiros, Merengues, the stale candy of everyone's childhood"</em> which is a reference to the childhood of the author or anyone displaced, for that matter. It brings back memories of their childhood.
Thus, the correct answer is the third option.
Answer:
<u>B. your predictions about the story</u>
Explanation:
Option A cannot be the answer because stories are written for entertainment, not to inform readers about a particular subject.
Option B is the answer; readers tend to make up predictions about the story in their mind just by reading the title, after reading the story, their predictions most certainly will be changed.
Option C cannot be the answer because the narrator of the story can simply not be changed just by reading the story.
Option D cannot be the answer as a reader cannot change the title of a book, only the writer can.